Tag Archives: gangs

The Bible has told us that we are to love our neighbor as we love ourselves. In fact, Jesus said that one day He will say to those who helped those in need, ‘Come, you blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world: for I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in; I was naked and you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you came to Me’ (Matthew 25:34-36).

It is hard to go to a place like India and see a woman on the streets, begging with a child in tow and not do something about it. She is dressed shabbily, perhaps bare feet, her face dirty and in her arms is a sleeping infant or a toddler with a dirty face, runny nose and big eyes looking at you as his mother holds out a thin, dirty hand for money. Your heart melts and you reach into your handbag or your money belt to take out some money to give her. It’s impossible for you not to help this mother and her child. You give her the money and she takes it and goes way. Your heart feels light. You have done a great thing.

It’s a common sight in India to see a dirty looking woman carrying a child in her arms. If you are driving, you see them at the traffic light and when you stop, they come to your car and bang on the window. Sometimes it’s a little boy with a runny nose. You will find them in the railway stations, metro stations, tourist attractions, in temples and in areas where there are crowds. People who see them are moved to give them money. Sometimes they shoo them away.

It is perfectly normal for people to beg in a country where there is so much poverty. In fact, begging has become one of the most serious social issues in India in spite of rapid economic growth. This has led to the growth of beggars in the country. Most of them come from Bangladesh and some are from India. The problem is that not all of the beggars are legitimate. The few who are real are those who are handicapped because they are unable to work, they are old or blind or they need money for basic needs. Many live far below the poverty line and have been forced to beg in order to survive.

There are entire families who are begging on the streets and in temples because their income is not enough. The children are unable to go to school. Poverty is very real in India and begging is the only way the people can earn their livelihood. Unfortunately, begging has become a big scam in India. Travel India Smart warns people who plan to visit India that if they are approached by a women carrying a baby and begging for money not to give her any money. These women make the babies look pathetic to appeal to the public’s sympathy.

In an article, Travel India Smart says that when one woman takes a rest, she hands the baby over to other women who continue to walk the streets in the hot sun, carrying the baby. Babies are rented out from beggar to beggar. As a mother, I can’t imagine how a mother could allow her baby to be used like this. Maps of India says that sometimes the babies are drugged for the entire day so that they look sick and can be easily carried from one area to another by the young women beggars.

These beggars want money. One beggar said that the baby she was carrying had just been fed and she would prefer money. In Mumbai, a child or a woman beggar approaches a visitor, wanting some powdered milk to feed a baby. The woman would take the visitor to a nearby stall or shop which happens to sell tins or boxes of the milk. The milk is pricey and if the tourist hands over the money for it, the shopkeeper and the beggar split the proceeds between them. The beggars rent babies from their mothers to make them look credible and they carry these sedated babies who are draped limply in their arms and claim that they don’t have any money to feed them.

When confronted by a woman beggar and a child, what do we do? In an article written in Go India, Sharell Cook, suggests that it is best to ignore the beggars. It may sound harsh but by not giving them what they want, you are taking the necessary step toward abolishing beggary. It is something that has become a menace to society. It is exploiting the compassion of those who want to help those in need. It is making it difficult for the real beggars. Babies and children are being exploited. And gangs are profitting from begging. Some beggars have gone as far as deliberately maiming and disfiguring themselves just to get more money.

Something has to be done to stop this epidemic. One suggestion is that charitable organizations use their clout with governments to ban beggars from using babies. Another suggestion is that the Indian government continues with its measures to alleviate poverty. For our part, people can help to stop this problem by not giving money to these beggars. Instead, they are encouraged to visit a temple and give alms to the beggars there.

Tips for giving to Beggars are:

If you really want to give to beggars, give only 10-20 rupees at a time and give them when leaving a place not when you arrive or you will be mobbed.
• Try to give to those who perform a service, such as small children who dance or sing
• Give to those who are elderly or crippled.

God wants us to show compassion to those who are in need but He doesn’t expect us to help those who would take advantage of our charity and exploit others for their greedy gains.

Avoid giving to women with babies because the babies are usually not theirs. The best thing you can do is to not give anything to the beggars. If everyone were to stop giving, then these gangs and all those who are profitting from begging will be put out of business. They will have no choice to work and earn an honest living. And visitors can enjoy a hassle free vacation.

Imagine that you are discarded, abandoned and abused. You are forced to beg or turn to drugs. Imagine being separated from your family. And if you are a girl, imagine being abandoned by your parents.

These are the sad realities for millions of children in Asia. They live in the streets where they are vulnerable or fall prey to kidnappers who sell them into bonded labor and the sex trade. Those who manage to avoid the kidnappers fall into gangs, drugs and alcoholism. Distrust and pain are their constant companions. Everyday is a struggle to survive.

I encourage you to watch this video which will help you to better understand the plight of these children and what is being done by Gospel for Asia to change their circumstances and bring them hope.

You can offer these children a safe haven by supporting Gospel for Asia who has a home for runaway and abandoned children. You can partner with the ministry so it can continue to develop programs to help these children. You can change their lives forever. Through your generosity and compassion, you can show them that there is a God who loves them and has not abandoned them.

When my father and my motherforsake me, then the LORD will take me up – Psalm 27:10

Usually before I retire for the night, I check on my son. I make sure he’s nicely tugged in. He has a home. He has his own room. He doesn’t have to take the bus to school. His Dad drives him there. He doesn’t have to worry about anything. He is well cared for. In fact, he has a lot to be thankful for. He is living a life of luxury compared to other children. There are children out there who would gladly trade places with him. These children are “street children”. Who are they?

Street children are minors who live and survive on the streets. They often grow up in public landfills, train stations, our under the bridges of the world’s major cities – Humanium

Why do they live on the streets? There are several reasons such as family, poverty, abuse and war. Economic, social and political factors can also play a role.

Children end up on the streets for a number of reasons, many of which are rooted in family instability and poverty. In the region where we work, children most often leave home because they are fleeing instability or have been rejected and abandoned by their families for various reasons (disabilities, disease or disobedience). Many of the children we have worked with have left their homes to flee domestic violence, abusive relatives or neglectful families. Others have done so because their families live in severe economic distress, either in rural villages or city slums, and are unable to care for them – The Street Child Project

Life on the street is fraught with danger for these children. They are vulnerable to abuse, trafficking and sexual exploitation. Some of them end up in gangs. This is heartbreaking because all these children want is a better life–something they didn’t have at home.

…the most vulnerable are those who actually sleep and live on the streets, hiding under bridges, in gutters, in railway stations. While they may have small jobs such as shoe-shining or market-selling to pull through, may also end up dying on the pavement, victims of drugs, gang rivalry and disease. Without some form of basic education and economic training, the future is bleak for these street children and their life expectancy terrifyingly low – Unesco

Poor nutrition is another problem street children face. They can’t get food because they don’t have money. And those who can buy something to eat, they choose unhealthy foods such as ice cream, cakes. Since they don’t have access to sanitary facilities they are often dirty and infested with fleas. Lack of hygiene makes them susceptible to diseases.

I wish I had my mother or father with me, Nandi thought, weeping in the corner of the room. They would have never allowed anybody to beat me like that.

Nandi is a little boy who never knew his real parents. He was adopted but his adoptive parents treated him like a servant and beat him. They got angry when he called them “mother and father”. I can’t begin to imagine what life must have been like for this child. He longed for his real parents, believing that they would never allow anyone to mistreat him. He longed for their love and protection. As parents, we are responsible not only for raising our children, teaching them and disciplining them but we are supposed to love and protect them. They should feel safe at home. Nandi didn’t experience love, protection or security. All he knew was unkindness, abuse and forced labor. Unable to take the abuse any longer, he decided to run away and boarded a train to a big city.

We know that a big city is no place for a child. Not surprisingly, Nandi soon ended up begging at the roadside all day long. Like Oliver Twist, Nandi met his Fagan. This man took the money Nandi got for begging and in exchange, gave him little food. When Nandi didn’t want to do this any more, the man became incensed and beat him. The next day when Nandi again refused to beg, the man beat another boy in front of him. His will broken and gripped by fear, Nandi obeyed. God would have to intervene and He did in an unexpected way.

Nandi was crossing the street one night when a car ran over his foot. A police officer rushed over to where the injured boy was and took him to a hospital. Nandi stayed in the hospital for more than six months, recuperating. He had a visitor–a woman who asked him if he wanted to go to a children’s home. Initially, Nandi refused because he was afraid . New people and places intimidated him. However, when he saw how kind she was, he changed his mind and she took him to Gospel for Asia’s home for abandoned and runaway boys.

It took a while for Nandi to get used to being there. During his first days there, he was overwhelmed by the new faces and structured lifestyle. He broke down in tears and was comforted by the staff members. They assured him, “Don’t worry, because we are here like your mother and father.” What a change from the life he had known before then. While he had been with his adoptive parents, he had craved parental love and here he was receiving it from strangers. The women brought him food and medicine when he wasn’t able to move around much because he was still recovering from his operation. They stayed with him at night when he couldn’t sleep. Much like a mother stays with her child until he or she falls asleep. The love of these people touched this little boy’s heart. Maybe a mother or father would do the same things these sisters are doing, he thought. Through the loving care of these women, God revealed Himself to a child who had been starved of love all his life.

That accident was God’s way of getting Nandi off the streets and putting him in a place where he would be cared for and receive a good education and learn about Jesus. Now, Nandi wants to serve Jesus by singing.

As one whom his mother comforts, so I will comfort you – Isaiah 66:13

Manjulika’s life was much different from Nandi’s. She knew her parents. She and her sisters lived with them. One day, Manjulika’s world was turned upside down. She woke up to learn that her mother was dead. She had died in the hospital. From that moment on, Manjulika became a mother to her younger sisters. Their father worked long hours as a rickshaw driver. He would go home drunk and sometimes he beat them. As Manjulika struggled to raise her siblings, she thought of her mother and how she had done so much for them. She missed her. She missed her mother’s love and care, especially as she and her sisters didn’t receive any love from their father. In fact, he had no problem letting the government take them to a Gospel for Asia home for at-risk girls. The girls would soon come to know another Father. One who loves them.

The moment Manjulika walked into Gospel for Asia’s home for abandoned girls, she knew that she was in the right place. This was a place where she would receive love and care. She was no longer burdened with the responsibility of raising her siblings. She had help. The staff was there to provide for their needs. They got food, school supplies and clothes. And most importantly, they received the kind of love they had once received from their mother. The staff was like a mother to the girls. They sat with Manjulika whenever she got sick and helped her to eat. They celebrated her birthday. Manjulika had never had a birthday party before. The staff enrolled her in a good school and helped her with her homework. Things were looking up.

Manjulika thinks about her mother again but this time it is without sadness. “These sisters care for us, and they meet all our needs. If my mother were alive, she too would have done the same things the sisters are doing to me.” She is again experiencing the kind of love she once had when her mother was alive and missed when she died.

He administers justice for the fatherless and the widow, and loves the stranger, giving him food and clothing – Deuteronomy 10:18

Today, Manujika wants to be a teacher and share her knowledge with children. She also wants to tell others about Jesus. She wants them to know that he loves them regardless of their background.

Nandi and Manujika had happy endings to their stories but there are children out there who are still living on the streets and in danger of exploitation, drugs, violence and premature death. Please lift them up in prayer. Pray that God will intervene in their lives as He did with Nandi and Manujika and take them off the streets. Children are precious in His sight. They deserve to have quality life. They deserve to have a bright future. They deserve to have love, protection, care, education and knowledge of Jesus.